Multi-Criteria Inventory Classification of Pharmaceuticals for Inventory Management Optimization: The Case of Public Hospitals in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.

No Thumbnail Available

Date

2023-12

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Addis Ababa University

Abstract

Background: Inventory management is the heart of the pharmaceutical supply chain system. Effective and efficient management of medical stores requires close monitoring of important drugs, prevention of the pilferage and priority in purchase and distribution of drugs that would help to optimize use of resources and eventually help to improve patient care, by ensuring the availability of essential stocks and preventing stock-outs. Implementation of different types of products’ classification and categorization for inventory optimization is critical to minimize the inventory cost and maximize inventory efficiency. Objective: To describe multi-criteria inventory classification of pharmaceuticals for inventory management optimization in Addis Ababa public hospitals. Methods: Facility-based descriptive cross-sectional study design with mixed research approach was conducted to retrospectively review logistic data from the digital health commodity management information system (HCMIS) and manual records of 2012-2013 EFY. The quantitative data was analyzed using Microsoft excel spreadsheet and SPSS version 20, while the qualitative data was analyzed thematically. Result: The ABC – VED matrix analysis revealed that 264 (33.67%) of category (AV, AE, AD, BV, CV) items account for 84.65 % of total pharmaceutical expenditure (TPE), of which the highest amount (32.54%) & (31.17%) was AE & AD items 30 (3.83%) & 50 (6.38%) respectively. From FSN – XYZ matrix analysis Category Ⅰ consists (FX, FY, FZ, SX & NX) that hold 30.35% of items with 68.12% of total pharmaceutical expenditure (TPE) and 40.21% of items were category Ⅱ (SY, SZ & NY) holds 11.1% of TPE. The remaining 22.44% of items accounted 21.2% of TPE were grouped under category Ⅲ (NZ) in 2012. On the other hand Category Ⅰ holds 36.29% of items that accounted 90.64% of TPE, category Ⅱ and category Ⅲ holds 51.87% &11.83% of items that accounted 9.05% & 0.31% of TPE in 2013, respectively. viii Conclusion: ABC-VED matrix analysis of present study showed that category Ⅰ pharmaceuticals holds large amount (84.65%) of budget that needs greater attention for control which avoids wasting extra funds on the purchase of drugs that are not really necessary. Category I consumed 68.12% and 90.64% of total consumption in 2012 and 2013, respectively, according to the FSN-XYZ matrix study. According to this finding, NZ class products spent more budgets (21.2%) in 2012 than 2013 (0.3%). which are non-moving and have low closing values, which creates an issue with a lack of available space and a high rate of waste. In 2013, Category I consumed 90.64% of all pharmaceutical spending and required tight manager supervision. This study also examined the inventory management practices with in public hospitals, and the findings indicated that while ABC-VED analysis is used in these facilities, it is not updated yearly. FSN-XYZ analysis is not used in any of the hospitals. To reduce overstock and stock out, the hospitals used different inventory control techniques, such as minimum/maximum, routine physical inventory, bin cards, and stock cards.

Description

Keywords

Multi-criteria classification, ABC-VED Analysis, FSN-XYZ Analysis, inventory management optimization.

Citation

Collections